I was going to put this in the hunting section but it's more of a rambling on my trials and tribulations with my smoke pole.
I had written awhile back about my issues at my last club shoot and after sometime on my home range I thought I had things figured out.
there were a lot of tips from concerned club members on how to deal with things and one thing i was told is " you don't have to clean out the flash pan after each shot, which is something I did religiously. Okay , I'll tuck that away in my brain.
Fast forward to this past Sunday, It had been raining hard all day Saturday and by Sunday everything was soaked, out I went in the dark and i took what seemed like the proper precautions and used a cow knee, greasy knee, whatever you like to call them. Things stayed dry, the sun came out and it was nice !
Later in the morning a doe presented a shot so i took it. The mistake i made was wearing thin insulated gloves and never shooting my gun with said gloves.
When the deer was broadside i squeezed the trigger and it felt like the hammer should have fallen but nuttin! the glove must have compressed as i squeezed and felt like trigger movement but as said nuttin happened!
That caused me to instantly jerk the trigger which caused me to raise my head which caused the muzzle to rise which caused etc etc etc. The gun goes bang, the deer runs off. Well , that was something !
WTH, now remember that advice about not wiping the flash pan and the fact it was rather moist out. Quick reload, 4f in the dirty pan and start the tracking i hoped.
After a 45 minute search i found no signs of a hit and headed home to lick my wounds. when i got home i decided to fire off the load i had in the gun and clean her up.
I stepped up to the line and fsssst, sounded just like a slow fuse. no bang of course. apparently the dirty pan held moisture, when i put in dry primer it absorbed moisture from that dirty pan. my guess at least . lesson learned.
cleaned the pan, re primed and flash, no bang, ugh. wipe the pan again, add some 4f and bang, right on the old 8" frying pan hanging on the backstop from 35 yds
Okay, I am confused and befuddled by this contraption and i owe it to the deer and my stomach to use my TC cap gun for the remainder of the season until i can get this flinter figured out.
I take the kibler to the work bench for a final cleaning before putting her up, hmmm another broken flint, took a corner of my black English flint.
only about 7-8 shots on it. this kibler has a very strong main spring.
I pulled the barrel, corrosion on the 3 under flats, moisture and black powder water staining under the breech on the stock. more ugh.
Looks like the jacks black has worn off, applied too thin me thinks . all good now, cleaned up, bear greased everything and put her up in her not to final resting place.
well that's my story, more hunting still to come but in a more 19th century style.
kevin